United States Air Force A-10s Visit Philippines

Source: United States INDO PACIFIC COMMAND

U.S. Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt IIs assigned to the 25th Fighter Squadron landed at Clark Air Base, Philippines on Dec. 6, 2024. U.S. Pacific Air Forces Airmen will conduct integrated training with the Philippine Air Force through Dec. 15, providing pilots and maintenance teams an opportunity to increase shared capabilities and enhance interoperability.

Collaboration in these training activities reinforces the strong partnership between the U.S. and Philippine Air Forces and underscores their commitment to promoting regional stability.

Pacific Air Force’s Dynamic Force Employment deployments enhance combined lethality by prioritizing the capacity and capabilities for major combat operations while being strategically predictable but operationally unpredictable in an ever-evolving competitive and contested environment. The U.S. Air Force conducts regular training and engagements such as this within the region to further develop operational readiness and ensure a free and open Indo-Pacific.

JMSDF Fleet Air Force, U.S. Navy’s Task Force 70 sign memorandum to increase bilateral electronic attack capability

Source: United States INDO PACIFIC COMMAND

Japan Maritime Self Defense Force (JMSDF) Vice Adm. Koji Kaneshima, Commander, Fleet Air Force (CFAF), and U.S. Navy Rear Adm. Greg Newkirk, Commander, Task Force (CTF) 70, signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) to increase bilateral operations between the forces’ electronic attack squadrons Dec. 6, 2024.

The signing, which took place at Naval Air Facility Atsugi in Kanagawa prefecture, Japan, represented a pledge between the two commanders to increase bilateral operations and training between the JMSDF Air Reconnaissance Squadron (VQ) 81 and CTF 70 electronic attack assets, which include Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 5’s Electronic Attack Squadron (VAQ) 141, as well as expeditionary electronic attack squadron detachments rotationally deploying to Japan from Whidbey Island, Washington.

“Today, ‘FUJIN’ MOU was revised for the purpose of further strengthening Integrated Fire capabilities between CFAF and CTF70,” said Kaneshima. “Besides that, with Rear Adm. Newkirk, we came to an agreement to promote ‘FUJIN’ program. We will keep developing the mutual understanding and tactical skills between the commands and units through the trainings and exercises.”

Task Force 70’s electronic attack squadrons fly EA-18G Growler aircraft, while VQ-81 flies UP-3D electronic attack aircraft, among other assets.

The EA-18G Growler integrates the latest electronic attack technology, including the ALQ-218 sensor for airborne situational awareness, as well as ALQ-99 pods capable of jamming adversarial radar and communications systems, and next-generation jamming technology as it is refined and implemented across the force.

“Today, we’re formalizing our commitment to generate real warfighting advantage by increasing and enhancing our combined technology and expertise in the field of electronic warfare,” said Newkirk. “Our work together moving forward will allow us to expand our shared air and maritime domain awareness, as well as refine and perfect our combined electronic attack capability.”

VAQ-141 is forward-deployed to Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni as part of Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 5, while the expeditionary VAQ-134 operates out of Misawa Air Base in the northern part of the country and Kadena Air Base in Okinawa in the southern part of the country.

Task Force 70 controls the preponderance of forward-deployed air and surface maneuver and striking forces in the U.S. 7th Fleet area of operations, overseeing Destroyer Squadron (DESRON) 15, Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron (HSM) 51 and VAQ 134, as well as the ships and aircraft operating under Carrier Strike Group (CSG) 5, including the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS George Washington (CVN 73), the Ticonderoga-class guided-missile cruiser USS Robert Smalls (CG 62), the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Shoup (DDG 86) and CVW-5.

U.S. 7th Fleet is the U.S. Navy’s largest forward-deployed numbered fleet, and routinely interacts and operates with allies and partners in preserving a free and open Indo-Pacific region.

U.S. Marine Rotational Force and Singapore Armed Forces Launch Annual Valiant Mark Exercise

Source: United States INDO PACIFIC COMMAND

The Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) and Marine Rotational Force-Southeast Asia (MRF-SEA) commenced Exercise Valiant Mark 2024 in a ceremony today at Bedok Camp, Singapore. The combined U.S.-Singapore force will continue Valiant Mark 24 training through Dec. 13, focusing heavily on increasing interoperability between forces and building a sense of partnership among personnel.

Valiant Mark 24 is an annual, bilateral exercise between the SAF and Marines from I Marine Expeditionary Force conducted to cultivate a more cohesive and responsive partnership with our Singaporean counterparts, reinforcing our collective ability to respond to crisis or contingency in the Indo-Pacific as a combined and unified force. Each iteration of Valiant Mark directly supports the strategic partnership between our two nations.

“The United States and Singapore enjoy a robust and enduring security partnership, and this annual exercise, which dates back to the 1980s, is a testament to our shared commitment to regional peace and stability and to a free and open Indo-Pacific that allows all of us to prosper,” said Jesse Shaw, the spokesperson for U.S. Embassy Singapore.

Exercise Valiant Mark 2023 took place in October of last year aboard the U.S. Marine Corps’ Camp Pendleton in California. The major units involved were the 13th Marine Expeditionary Unit (13th MEU) and the 7th Singapore Infantry Brigade (7 SIB). Since October 2024, MRF-SEA has been primarily comprised of personnel from the 13th MEU, meaning that many of the same Marines are now training alongside Singapore forces again in this year’s iteration of the exercise.

“MRF-SEA Marines and Sailors are primed and ready to execute Valiant Mark 24 in Singapore to build on the strong foundation established with our SAF partners during last year’s exercise aboard Camp Pendleton,” said U.S. Marine Corps Col. Stuart W. Glenn, the commanding officer of MRF-SEA. “Our strategic partnership with Singapore is critical to upholding the rules-based international order in the Indo-Pacific, and I’m confident that this Valiant Mark will further enhance our combined capabilities and readiness.”

Exercise Valiant Mark has served as a command-post staff exercise, utilizing alternating training locations in Singapore and the United States, since its inception in the mid-2000s. Building upon U.S.-Singapore military engagements originating in the 1980s, this annual training event has established a unique platform for U.S. Marines to engage with their Singaporean counterparts, further solidifying the two nations’ enduring security partnership.

“Over more than two decades, Exercise Valiant Mark has transformed into a significant exercise that has advanced our combined operational capabilities, improved our interoperability, and refined our skills across various tactical scenarios,” said SAF Senior Lieutenant Colonel Enriquez Michael Zachary, commander of the 7th Singapore Infantry Brigade. “In addition, this exercise will serve as a platform to forge friendships that will last far beyond this exercise.”

Valiant Mark 24 will bring together personnel from the SAF, including 7 SIB and its subordinate unit, 3rd Battalion Singapore Guards (3 GDS), and U.S. forces from MRF-SEA, including attached personnel from 1st Battalion, 5th Marines and 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines of the 1st Marine Division.

-30-

POINT OF CONTACT:
Capt. Mark McDonough
Communication Strategy & Operations Director
Marine Rotational Force-Southeast Asia
+1 (760) 799-4590
mark.mcdonough@usmc.mil

US CENTCOM Commander visits Jordan

Source: United States Central Command (CENTCOM)

December 9, 2024
Release Number 20241209-01
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

TAMPA, Fla. – Today, Gen. Kurilla met with Maj. Gen. Yousef Al-Hunaiti, Chairman of the Jordanian Joint Chiefs of Staff, in Amman, Jordan, and discussed efforts to enhance regional cooperation and security, strengthening U.S.-Jordanian military cooperation, as well as the rapidly changing situation on the ground in Syria. Jordan has long served as a reliable strategic partner for peace and stability in the region, and Gen. Kurilla reiterated the U.S. commitment to supporting Jordan should any threats arise from Syria during the current period of transition.

NMRTC Twentynine Palms Officer Participates in Brazil Medical Riverine Humanitarian Mission

Source: United States Navy (Medical)

Lt. Jillian Dunbar, a Navy environmental health officer from Elmhurst, Illinois, recently participated in a humanitarian mission along the Amazon River that represented both a professional milestone and a personal journey.

Assigned to the Brazil Medical Riverine Humanitarian Mission in August 2024, Dunbar joined a team of U.S. and Brazilian medical professionals aboard the Navio de Assistência Hospitalar Doutor Montenegro (U16) to provide medical care to isolated indigenous communities while exchanging critical expertise.

“This was my first time traveling outside the U.S. with the Navy,” Dunbar said. “The entire mission was impactful. It was an inspiring experience, specifically providing me with a hands-on opportunity to practice and refine my skills as an environmental health officer, but also learn new skills like diagnosing and treating tropical diseases and having cross-cultural communication with both the Marinha do Brasil and the indigenous communities.”

Dunbar arrived at Naval Medical Readiness and Training Command (NMRTC) Twentynine Palms in November 2022. Driven by a desire to serve her country and make a meaningful impact in public and environmental health, she has always strived to pursue opportunities that aligned with her passion for global health.

“There were a lot of factors that went into my decision to join the Navy,” Dunbar said. “Primarily, I wanted to serve my country and knew I could make an impact in public and environmental health. I have an interest in infectious diseases, so combatting outbreaks in military settings and ensuring troops are staying healthy is incredibly important to me. The Navy also allows me opportunities to participate in global health engagements where I can learn about different diseases and healthcare resources.”
Her fluency in Portuguese and completion of the Military Tropical Medicine Course earlier this year — a prerequisite for field deployments — made her uniquely qualified to join the mission, which brought U.S. and Brazilian personnel together to address public health and medical challenges along the Amazon.

“I do speak Portuguese, so while there are other locations for these missions, Brazil was a good fit for me,” Dunbar said. “I was invited on the mission to receive firsthand and clinical experience with diagnosing and treating tropical diseases.”

The five-week mission, sponsored by U.S. Southern Command as part of a health security cooperation initiative, began in early August, brought together U.S. Navy doctors, microbiologists and environmental health experts with their Brazilian counterparts to address public health challenges and provide medical care along the Amazon River. Commencing in Manaus, Brazil, the team traveled aboard the Navio de Assistência Hospitalar Doutor Montenegro (U16), delivering care to remote communities, diagnosing tropical diseases and collaborating on methods to improve public health outcomes in resource-limited settings.

The mission included stops at Aldeia Indígena Palmares, where Dunbar and her colleagues worked with Brazilian medical personnel to address urgent health needs, as well as Comunidade Indígena Feijoal and Umariaçu, where they facilitated medical knowledge exchanges, conducted health education sessions and treated patients. Each visit offered unique opportunities to enhance the teams’ understanding of tropical medicine while making a meaningful impact in underserved areas. Stops throughout the mission reinforced the critical importance of cultural sensitivity and teamwork in global health missions.

For Dunbar, the mission was defined by its human connections and the opportunity to explore another culture.

“The people were the highlight of this mission,” she said. “Whether it was meeting new officers from the U.S. Navy and forming bonds with them, collaborating with the sailors from the Marinha do Brasil and learning about our cultural differences, or conversing with the indigenous peoples while delivering healthcare, those connections made a huge impact. And the food was delicious.”

The Brazil mission was a capstone for Dunbar’s growing expertise in environmental health and infectious disease prevention. It provided her with the opportunity to apply her training in real-world scenarios and broaden her understanding of tropical medicine.

“This broader perspective is eye-opening and enriching and can refresh one’s sense of purpose that comes from helping others,” Dunbar said.
Reflecting on her experience, Dunbar urged other sailors to seek out unique assignments like her Brazil mission.

“I would highly encourage other sailors to accept unique opportunities like this mission,” she said. “Humanitarian missions are great for experiencing different cultures, environments and having this exchange of knowledge with various partners.”

Dunbar’s involvement in the Brazil mission underscores the Navy’s commitment to not only serving its operational needs but also advancing global health partnerships and addressing challenges faced by underserved populations worldwide.

As she returns to her duties at NMRTC Twentynine Palms, Dunbar carries with her the lessons, memories and connections forged during her time on the Amazon, ready to apply them in service of the Navy’s mission.

NAMRU San Antonio Soldiers compete for NCO & Solider of the Year

Source: United States Navy (Medical)

JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO-FORT SAM HOUSTON – (Dec. 5, 2024) – Soldiers assigned to Naval Medical Research Unit (NAMRU) San Antonio’s Research Services Directorate earned Non-Commissioned Officer (NCO) and Solider of the Year honors during the Fiscal Year 2024 Solider, NCO and Officer of the Year Competition Ceremony hosted by Col. James Jones, commander, Public Health Command, West.

Sgt. Gabriela Saldana of Austin, Texas, and Pfc. Tyler Houchin of Vine Grove, Ky., were announced as the winners for NAMRU San Antonio while Sgt. Samantha Salas earned a participation medal.

Both Saldana and Houchin were awarded Army Commendation Medals while Sgt. Carlos Torres of NAMRU San Antonio was awarded an Army Achievement Medal for his support of the competition, which for the first time included officers.

The Soldiers, joined by other personnel assigned to Public Health Command, West, took part in the three-day competition, Dec. 3 – 5, which consisted of an Expert Physical Fitness Assessment (EPFA), Engagement Skills Trainer (EST), Combat Water Survival Test, writing exam, land navigation, Army Warrior Tasks and Battle Drills, a 12-mile foot march, written essay, and an oral board.

“First and foremost, I would like to say thank you to the entire support team for putting on a fantastic, vigorous, and challenging competition,” said Command Sgt. Maj. Delroy Barnett, who served as the ceremony’s keynote speaker. “The competition was designed to promote esprit de corps while recognizing outstanding NCOs and junior Soldiers, and for the first time in command’s history, officers.”

According to Barnett, it is essential for Soldiers to possess the necessary knowledge, skills, and mindset to excel in challenging landscapes.

“I want to express my deepest respect and gratitude to all the participants,” said Barnett. “You are a testament to the finest qualities of the American Solider. Your achievements inspire us all, your resilience motivates us to push beyond our limits, and your unwavering commitment to excellence serves as a shining example for generations to come.”

NAMRU San Antonio’s mission is to conduct gap driven combat casualty care, craniofacial, and directed energy research to improve survival, operational readiness, and safety of Department of Defense (DoD) personnel engaged in routine and expeditionary operations.

It is one of the leading research and development laboratories for the U.S. Navy under the DoD and is one of eight subordinate research commands in the global network of laboratories operating under the Naval Medical Research Command in Silver Spring, Md.

U.S. Central Command conducts dozens of airstrikes to eliminate ISIS camps in central Syria

Source: United States Central Command (CENTCOM)

Dec. 8, 2024
Release Number 20241208-01
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

TAMPA, Fla. – U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) forces conducted dozens of precision airstrikes targeting known ISIS camps and operatives in central Syria, Dec. 8.

The strikes against the ISIS leaders, operatives, and camps were conducted as part of the ongoing mission to disrupt, degrade, and defeat ISIS, in order to prevent the terrorist group from conducting external operations and to ensure that ISIS does not seek to take advantage of the current situation to reconstitute in central Syria.

The operation struck over 75 targets using multiple U.S. Air Force assets, including B-52s, F-15s, and A-10s.

Battle damage assessments are underway, and there are no indications of civilian casualties.

CENTCOM, together with allies and partners in the region, will continue to carry out operations to degrade ISIS operational capabilities even during this dynamic period in Syria.

“There should be no doubt – we will not allow ISIS to reconstitute and take advantage of the current situation in Syria,” said General Michael Erik Kurilla, “All organizations in Syria should know that we will hold them accountable if they partner with or support ISIS in any way.”

Forging Ahead: Pearl Harbor Day Ceremony Honors Past, Passes Legacy to Young Service Members

Source: United States INDO PACIFIC COMMAND

On the 80th anniversary of Pearl Harbor Day in 2021, about 135 World War II veterans attended the observance of the Dec. 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor. Last year, fewer than 30 veterans attended Dec. 7 events.

As veterans and Pearl Harbor survivors pass away, their legacy lives on with the next generation of service members.

This year’s 83rd Pearl Harbor Day commemoration features a series of observances co-hosted by the National Park Service and Commander, Navy Region Hawaii (CNRH), including the interment of a former Pearl Harbor Day survivor aboard the USS Utah (AG-16) and the Blackened Canteen ceremony. Young service members play an active in the commemoration rituals, reinforcing this year’s theme of Forging Ahead.

Units from the Junior Reserve Officers Training Corps will be participating in events and the granddaughter of a Pearl Harbor survivor will be the keynote speaker at the main Dec. 7 ceremony. “Although we honor those who passed away, we want to look forward to the future,” explained Jim Neuman, history and outreach manager for CNRH and one of the lead planners for the Pearl Harbor Day observance.

This year, the remains of Pearl Harbor survivor Gilbert Meyer will be interred aboard the wreckage of the USS Utah. Meyer passed away in 2023 at the age of 100. He served in the Navy for 22 years and retired as a Chief Petty Officer. He was an 18-year-old Fireman First Class assigned to the USS Utah when it was hit by a torpedo. On his 100th birthday last year, Meyer donated two acres of land in his hometown of Lytle, Texas, to the Veterans of Foreign Wars for a new meeting hall. He also wrote a book about his time in the Navy and how he survived the attack on Pearl Harbor.

Meyer’s nephew, Gilbert Benton, 79, said the interment ceremony for his uncle will be especially meaningful for his family.

“I’ve seen three of these interments over the years and it’s so moving to watch that, but it will be so special for us this year because it’s him,” said Benton, who emphasized how important it will be for his uncle to join his shipmates at rest.

To date, a total of 16 interments have taken place aboard the USS Utah.

The Pearl Harbor Day commemoration concludes on Dec. 8 with the Blackened Canteen ceremony aboard the USS Arizona Memorial (BB-39).

“This actually is in connection to the Park Service’s mission here at Pearl Harbor,” explained David Kilton, the interpretation, education, and services lead for the National Park Service. “We are the keeper of those stories that are brought to us and then we share them and try to honor all the different aspects of those stories.”

Kilton explained how this unique remembrance ceremony began:

On the night of June 20, 1945, during a bombing raid over Shizuoka, Japan, two B-29 aircraft collided and crashed, killing 23 crewmen. When a local Shizuoka businessman and farmer pulled fatally wounded U.S. airmen from the wreckage, he found a blackened canteen in one of the aircraft, distorted from heat and bearing what appeared to be the seared handprint of its late owner.

The farmer, who was a devout Buddhist who believed all life is precious, started conducting an annual ceremony honoring the Japanese and Americans who lost their lives as a result of the war. The ceremony included a silent prayer and the pouring of bourbon whiskey from the blackened canteen onto the crash site as an offering to the spirits of the fallen. Two monuments were later erected near the crash site in memory of those who died.

The Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day Ceremony on Dec. 7 is the main ceremony of the annual commemoration. It’s held at the Pearl Harbor National Memorial, which is dedicated to the memory of more than 2,300 service members and civilians who died during the Pearl Harbor attack. Central to the memorial is the USS Arizona Memorial, which rests above the remains of the sunken battleship and commemorates the 1,177 crewmen who died aboard. The USS Arizona suffered half of all casualties on the day of the attack.

Neuman explained how the design of the Arizona Memorial highlights the dual focus on the past and future and emphasized how he seeks to emulate this focus when he plans the details of Pearl Harbor Day.

“This ties into how I look at the ceremony,” he said. “It’s a memorial to the past because we’re honoring the greatest generation. We’re honoring those who gave their lives on Dec. 7, 1941. It’s a memorial to the future because when you look at the design of the memorial it starts out high, which is before the attack on Pearl Harbor. As you come aboard the memorial, you’re at a high point. It goes low over the center of the memorial, the center of the wreckage because Dec. 7, 1941 was a low point. Then it tapers to a high point over the shrine room.”

Alfred Preis, the architect who designed the Arizona Memorial, used the shrine room to accentuate the ideals of peace, renewal, and remembrance of those who lost their lives on the day of the attack, Neuman explained.

“On either side of the shrine room, you’ve got the Tree of Life. From a biblical perspective, that would be the Book of Revelations, healing of the nations, and from Alfred Preis’ perspective, it was the idea of renewal and lasting peace,” said Neuman. “We’re honoring those who were lost on Dec. 7, but we’re also looking forward to the future because he hoped that the victory at the end of World War II would be one that would lead to lasting peace and renewal and partnerships with our allies.”

The last survivor of the Arizona crew, Lou Conter, 102, passed away on April 1, 2024.

Neuman acknowledged the significance of that loss and said our generation’s ability to move on resembles how veterans and survivors of the Pearl Harbor attack were forging ahead with their lives with resilience and tenacity, which is part of the reason why “forging ahead” is this year’s theme for the observance.

“Part of honoring that legacy is knowing that they did push ahead within their lives with the trauma and horror of war,” explained Neuman. “For those of us who live in 2024, we see that memorial and it reminds us that if we’re going to carry on this lasting peace that the greatest generation fought and died to secure, it’s going to be up to our generation and the generations moving forward.”

Tripler Hospital on Pearl Harbor Day and the Nurses Who Answered the Call

Source: United States INDO PACIFIC COMMAND

World War II became real to many Americans on Sunday, Dec. 7, 1941, when 350 Japanese planes staged two air attacks on the U. S. military in Pearl Harbor and surrounding bases on Oahu, Hawaii. The attacks that morning took the U.S. Armed Forces by complete surprise.

“In the end, the U.S. would suffer the loss of 2,403 sailors, airmen, Marines, soldiers and civilians, and the battleships of America’s Pacific Fleet would lie at the bottom of Pearl Harbor. America’s air power lay in scattered ruins on Oahu’s airfields,” according to the official history of Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam.

Tripler Army Hospital was one of three military hospitals on the island overwhelmed with casualties.

Army Nurse Kathryn Doody Realizes It’s War

Eighty-two U.S. Army nurses were assigned to the three hospitals on Pearl Harbor Day, according to the U.S. Army’s 1972 commemorative book, “The Army Nurse Corps.”

One of those was Kathryn M. Doody, a farm girl from the Eastern shore of Maryland. Doody sailed to Honolulu in September 1941 to report to duty at Tripler after joining up in 1940 “because I was anxious to see the world,” she said in a May 27, 2004, video collected by the Library of Congress.
“I hadn’t been there very long before the bombs descended,” Doody recalled.

Doody was asleep in the nurses’ quarters at Tripler on a calm, semi-cloudy Sunday morning. “They woke me up, the noise. And I thought, ‘What in the world can this be?’ ‘Cause I never heard any racket that was so profound.”
When the night nurse came off duty, Doody recounted she said: “’Girls, you know what’s happening? … The island of Oahu has been attacked by the enemy, Japan.’”

Doody dressed hastily in her white tropical nurses’ uniform after being called by the nurse in the operating room, who said: “’Miss Doody, would you mind coming over to the operating room? They’re bringing all these men in from Hickam Field.’”

“I got in the hospital, into the operating room,” Doody recalled. “They had as many stretchers as they could get in one room. You know, all the rooms were filled up with wounded men.”

Tripler General Hospital at Fort Shafter was the largest military hospital in Hawaii, and, along with the 500-bed Army Schofield Barracks Station Hospital, could accommodate up to 1,450 patients.

Doody’s Day and the Next

One of Doody’s first operations was a traumatic amputation, and she feared she would faint from the sound of the bone saw.

“We were operating on a fellow that had had a fractured leg above the knee, and they were going to amputate that. So, the largest bone I had seen amputated in my … career was a finger or a toe. And I said to myself, ‘The sound of sawing bone, I don’t think I can stand, so I’m going to faint.’ And I never fainted in my life before.”

At some point, a Japanese plane flew over, “and we heard the bullets hitting the pavement. And the doctor that was working ducked his head … [and] said, ‘That was a close one.’ But none of it hit the hospital.”

She worked in the operating room from shortly after the attacks began until midnight under blackout conditions when the nurses were sent back to their dark quarters to return the next morning.

Wounded men and those recuperating from surgery were left on the floor overnight because it was too dark to move them, Doody recalled.

On the morning of Dec. 8, “we started all over again, you know, with the rooms being filled with wounded soldiers.”

The Casualties

More than 60% of casualties had suffered burns caused by either burning fuel oil in the harbor or flash burns caused by exposure to high-heat or very close bomb detonations, according to the U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command in a report on medical activities at Pearl Harbor.

In addition, the casualties had machine gun wounds, traumatic amputations, penetrating abdominal wounds, lacerations, and compound fractures. Almost all suffered from shock.

“Tripler Hospital was overwhelmed with hundreds of casualties suffering from burns and shocks,” according to a historical account of Dec. 7 from the nurses’ commemorative book.

“Nurses, physicians, and medical corpsmen triaged, stabilized, and transported those likely to survive, while staging the dead behind the building,” according to the Army’s historical records. Nurses used their lipsticks to mark the foreheads of the wounded as to whether they had received morphine or a tetanus shot.

The Hospital Experience

“From their first realization of an enemy attack, the doctors, dentists, nurses, and corpsmen were unexcelled in personal bravery, in determination, in resourcefulness, and in their capacity to put into practice previously formulated plans,” the U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command wrote in its account of the attack.

Both Schofield and Hickam hospitals took direct hits from the Japanese, who bombed and then strafed American bomber and fighter planes and personnel from very low altitudes, eyewitnesses said.

U.S. Army nurse Myrtle M. Watson was the only nurse in the orthopedic ward at Schofield Hospital during the attack. As the bombing started, “she helped protect patients by piling mattresses around them for cover,” according to an account from the Army.

“For three days, Watson continued working around the clock, with only a skeleton crew to assist” her and only a dim flashlight at night. “Collaboration between tireless doctors, nurses, and corpsmen was key to providing life-saving surgery and care,” the Army history said.

“The heroism of the drivers that were killed that day trying to speed those dying men to the hospital will probably never be told … All of this time, planes were diving low over Wheeler and as each plane pulled out of its dive, we could easily see those deadly bombs hurl themselves on their way to someone’s death,” according to eyewitness Don Hall, who was stationed with the Army Judge Advocate’s Office at Pearl Harbor.

Hickam Hit Hard

Casualties at Hickam “were also heavy, particularly among men who had taken refuge in the hangars after the first attack,” according to a U.S. Army account of the attacks.

U.S. Army Nurse Corps First Lt. Annie Fox was the chief nurse at Hickam Field Hospital, which was converted to an evacuation hospital during the attack.

“Fox assembled the nurses and volunteers to help care for the wounded,” according to the Army account.

“She assisted doctors with surgical procedures while the battle outside continued. When the wounded began to arrive at an overwhelming rate, she administered pain medicine and prepped patients for transfer to other hospitals.”

Although herself uninjured, Fox became the first woman in WW II to be awarded a Purple Heart in 1942 for “her fine example of calmness, courage, and leadership, which was of great benefit to the morale of all she came in contact with.” In 1944, the commendation was changed to a Bronze Star for valor.

A few minutes after the initial attack on Hickam, about 25 dive bombers hit at the hangars at Wheeler Field, and heavy casualties occurred when one bomb exploded in an adjoining barracks, according to the Army history.

After the bombing, the Japanese planes circled back at very low altitudes to machine-gun the pursuit craft parked (as at Hickam) in close formation in front of the hangars, and, as they circled, some of the enemy strafed nearby Schofield Barracks.

The Reckoning: A ‘Day Which Will Live in Infamy’

The surprise attacks lasted one hour and 15 minutes. There were 159 U.S. aircraft damaged; 169 destroyed; 16 ships were damaged; and three were destroyed.

Killed in the first wave were 1,177 officers and crew of the USS Arizona, nearly half of the total number who died that day. The battleship sank after taking a direct hit from an armor-piercing bomb that struck the ship’s forward magazine, causing a massive explosion that blew the ship out of the water “at the stern almost 90 degrees,” according to an eyewitness, retired 804th Engineer Aviation Battalion Allen Bodenlos. “The explosion was so tremendous, the ground where we were shook so violently, it almost knocked me over.”

The White House knew of the attacks almost immediately. The next day, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt delivered his famous “Day of Infamy” speech to Congress and formally declared war on Japan and Germany.

Doody, a Model for Military Nursing

Like many veterans, especially of WW II, Doody was reticent to talk about the horrors she saw while treating the injured and claimed she didn’t recall events or feelings. She was 87 when her video recollections were recorded. “I have this calmness about not being upset or perturbed,” is how she explained her personality. As for the wartime nursing experience, she was modest. “It’s just what you were trained to do.”

MRF-SEA Marines Strengthen Ties with Brunei Forces During CARAT Exercise

Source: United States INDO PACIFIC COMMAND

After completing the first three exercises of their current rotation in the Indo-Pacific, a group of subject matter experts from Marine Rotational Force – Southeast Asia (MRF-SEA) traveled to Brunei to join the U.S. Navy for its most recent iteration of the Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training (CARAT) exercise series from Nov. 18 to 25. Hosted by the Royal Brunei Armed Forces (RBAF), MRF-SEA Marines were joined by attached forces from 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines, resulting in a purpose-built U.S. Marine Corps team ready to train and engage with Brunei forces. While the U.S. Navy executed the at-sea phase of CARAT Brunei 2024, Marines trained ashore with the RBAF to build improved relations and bolster bilateral interoperability.

CARAT Brunei is a bilateral exercise designed to promote regional security, cooperation, and to enhance interoperability between the United States Armed Forces and the Royal Brunei Armed Forces. This year, U.S. Marines and Sailors joined the RBAF personnel to achieve these exercise objectives and maintaining a safe and secure region. MRF-SEA personnel played a critical role in the exercise through multiple training engagements with the RBAF, sharing knowledge on their military roles and occupations as subject matter experts. During the week-long exercise, the RBAF forces were trained in Marine Corps martial arts (MCMAP), non-lethal weapons employment and Military Operations in Urban Terrain (MOUT); three critical areas identified by exercise planners as essential for increased capability and interoperability.

“What we can learn from this exercise is that communication is really important when it comes to learning new skills, which is essential,” said 1370 Lieutenant Junior Grade Muhammad Hifzil Iman bin Haji Mazin, Royal Brunei Armed Forces. “Things like [Marine Corps Martial Arts Program] are really beneficial to us because we don’t have that training here in Brunei.”

U.S. Marines and Sailors with MRF-SEA have been on rotation in Southeast Asia since October to carry out eight exercises in six different countries throughout the region. The Marine Corps sends this purpose-built rotational force to countries like Brunei in order to reinforce the strategic partnership between our nations, increase interoperability between our military forces, and ensure a safe, secure, free and open Indo-Pacific.

“In real world operations, the skills we are teaching here are applicable when we’re talking about embassy reinforcement, embassy defense, and the moments before our crisis action teams are able to get on deck,” said Chief Warrant Officer 3 Kevin Huff. “Being able to have this level of interoperability with a strategic partner is absolutely crucial.”

As CARAT Brunei concluded on Nov. 25, personnel involved departed the exercise knowing that the relationship between Brunei and American forces were stronger than when they arrived. The Marines of MRF-SEA played a critical role in making the exercise a success, sharing their expertise with RBAF personnel in key areas, ultimately improving our ability to integrate and execute operations as a combined force. As strategic partners, achieving effective interoperability is key for our collective success.

MRF-SEA Marines and Sailors will remain in Southeast Asia through March 2025 to train alongside partner forces in Singapore and Thailand in Exercise Valiant Mark 2024, Exercise Cobra Gold 2025, and Exercise Valiant Mark 2025. With each completed exercise, MRF-SEA further solidifying our commitment to each allied and partner nation, while ensuring regional stability and security in the Indo-Pacific.